Julia Pascal: Political Plays: Honeypot; Broken English; Nineveh; Woman on the Bridge
By (Author) Julia Pascal
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Oberon Books Ltd
25th November 2013
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
822.914
Paperback
256
Width 130mm, Height 210mm, Spine 14mm
Sex, political violence in Stockholm, Tel Aviv and Paris. Political murder in suburban London. Death, love and homicide in New York. War in the belly of a whale. These are the themes in Julia Pascal's latest collection which takes place in London in 1946, Europe in 1982, Manhattan today and in a whale at anytime. Honeypot: Ten years after the massacres at the Munich Olympics, Susanne joins Mossad as a secret agent. This beautiful Swedish woman is at the heart of a struggle between desire and destruction, between love and infidelity, between motherhood and freedom. Between Arab and Jew. Broken English: An exploration of a secret history that happened in London just after the end of the war. Why was there a plot to assassinate Ernest Bevin, the Foreign Secretary by right-wing Jewish activists When does loyalty to nation state conflict with loyalty to nation Nineveh: What happens when four former soldiers are trapped in a whale How can they live with the atrocities they have committed and escape from this hell which imprisons them Based on research in Kashmir, Israel, Rwanda and Lebanon, this Beckettian play fuses absurd humour, the horror of war and the possibility of redemption in a ninety-minute drama. Woman on the Bridge: Judith, a London journalist, goes to the Brooklyn Bridge. Does she want to jump off On her disturbing journey she spends a night with a very young man, she meets Anna, her hundred-and-ten-year old great aunt and Gloria, a homicide cop. Her encounters with these New Yorkers forces her to change her life.
Julia Pascal is a playwright whose work has been performed widely in London, the UK, Germany, France, Belgium, Macedonia and the USA. Her TV drama documentary, Charlotte and Jane, was the script for the production which won a BAFTA and Royal Television Society Award. The Road to Paradise, for BBC Radio, was nominated for a Sony Prize and won an Alfred Bradley Award. She was a NESTA Dreamtime Fellow. Her play, St Joan, was chosen as one of the few modern plays to be workshopped and presented at New York's Lincoln Center Director's Lab. Her latest play, The Wedding Party, recently premiered at the Ohrid Festival, Macedonia. Julia is currently working on an epic project, exploring Christian Zionism from seventeenth century England to contemporary North America. Her plays are published by Oberon Books.